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Nurettin Güz; Israfil Yücel – International Journal on Social and Education Sciences, 2025
The rapid development following the emergence of web technologies has facilitated users' access to information. The design processes of web platforms are of great importance to ensure that all users can access these platforms. Within this process, it can be said that the use of web accessibility in the field of web technologies has become a key…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Internet, Accessibility (for Disabled), Computer System Design
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Waddell, Morgan L.; Amazeen, Eric L. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2020
Purpose: The current study investigated the effect of attention on heaviness perception and its physiological and kinematic contributions. Method: Participants lifted objects that varied in mass and volume while their muscle activity and movement were recorded. Participants were instructed to pay attention to their arm (internal) or the object…
Descriptors: Kinesthetic Perception, Athletics, Scientific Concepts, Human Body
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Signor, Rita; Claessen, Mary; Leitão, Suze – Australian Journal of Learning Difficulties, 2020
Reading success has a significant impact on social, academic and vocational engagement. While there have been many advances in Brazilian educational policy, and a reduction in rates of absolute illiteracy, low levels of literacy continue to be a significant area of concern. We aimed to scope the literature to identify the types of intervention…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dyslexia, Intervention, Phonological Awareness
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Daliri, Ayoub; Chao, Sara-Ching; Fitzgerald, Lacee C. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: We continuously monitor our speech output to detect potential errors in our productions. When we encounter errors, we rapidly change our speech output to compensate for the errors. However, it remains unclear whether we adjust the magnitude of our compensatory responses based on the characteristics of errors. Method: Participants (N = 30…
Descriptors: Speech, Error Correction, Error Patterns, Responses
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Chládková, Katerina; Paillereau, Nikola – Language Learning, 2020
The young universal listener is an established concept in psycholinguistics. However, it is unclear what abilities universal perception entails and at what age it exists. This article aims to motivate rethinking about what it means to be a universal listener. Early and recent studies on infant speech acquisition are reviewed, considered in the…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Listening Skills, Speech Acts, Auditory Perception
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Spence, Charles – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2020
Traditionally, architectural practice has been dominated by the eye/sight. In recent decades, though, architects and designers have increasingly started to consider the other senses, namely sound, touch (including proprioception, kinesthesis, and the vestibular sense), smell, and on rare occasions, even taste in their work. As yet, there has been…
Descriptors: Building Design, Perception, Cognitive Processes, Sensory Integration
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Cheng, Lin-Hua; Wang, Chih-Hung; Lu, Rou-Huei; Chen, Yu-Fu – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: No study has investigated the effects of contralateral noise (CN) on speech-in-noise perception (SINP) in listeners with tinnitus. The mechanisms underlying the involvement of medial olivocochlear (MOC) reflex with SINP remain to be elucidated. This study aimed to investigate the MOC function in patients with bilateral tinnitus by…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Auditory Perception, Hearing Impairments, Patients
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Padhi, Lili Kumari; Mishra, Deepanjali – International Journal of Web-Based Learning and Teaching Technologies, 2020
This article describes how every learner is a unique creative individual responsible for paving his/her own way of learning in a preclusion of external restraints. Learners apply a bunch of idiosyncratic means to segue the information into knowledge. The various implications of such manipulated formulation by the learners implies strategic…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Cognitive Style, Self Determination, Perception
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Nartey, Michaelina N.; Peña-Castillo, Lourdes; LeGrow, Megan; Doré, Jules; Bhattacharya, Sriya; Darby-King, Andrea; Carew, Samantha J.; Yuan, Qi; Harley, Carolyn W.; McLean, John H. – Learning & Memory, 2020
In the olfactory bulb, a cAMP/PKA/CREB-dependent form of learning occurs in the first week of life that provides a unique mammalian model for defining the epigenetic role of this evolutionarily ancient plasticity cascade. Odor preference learning in the week-old rat pup is rapidly induced by a 10-min pairing of odor and stroking. Memory is…
Descriptors: Animals, Genetics, Learning, Olfactory Perception
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Daliri, Ayoub; Murray, Elizabeth S. Heller; Blood, Anne J.; Burns, James; Noordzij, J. Pieter; Nieto-Castanon, Alfonso; Tourville, Jason A.; Guenther, Frank H. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: Adductor spasmodic dysphonia (ADSD), the most common form of spasmodic dysphonia, is a debilitating voice disorder characterized by hyperactivity and muscle spasms in the vocal folds during speech. Prior neuroimaging studies have noted excessive brain activity during speech in participants with ADSD compared to controls. Speech involves…
Descriptors: Voice Disorders, Brain, Speech, Auditory Perception
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Santos, Marli; de Fatima Batistela, Rosemeire – Mathematics Teaching Research Journal, 2020
This article focuses on the experience of viewing polyhedra in modified kaleidoscopes, highlighting the perceptive acts that take place. It presents aspects of geometry, such as concepts and ideas involved in the visualization of polyhedra in kaleidoscopes, through an analyticalmathematical study of the reflection of images in mirrors and…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Visualization, Geometry, Phenomenology
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Shinohara, Yasuaki – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2021
Purpose: This study tested the hypothesis that audiovisual training benefits children more than it does adults and that it improves Japanese-speaking children's English /r/-/l/ perception to a native-like level. Method: Ten sessions of audiovisual English /r/-/l/ identification training were conducted for Japanese-speaking adults and children.…
Descriptors: Japanese, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Training
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Ruitenberg, Claudia; Rathje, Elisa – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2022
Education and, in particular, education concerned with our response to the climate crisis, can draw important lessons from the changed desires and re-evaluation of individual and collective values and goals that occurred as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic has shown us the importance of making the limits of the world perceptible.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Climate, Perception
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Tosatto, Laure; Fagot, Joël; Nemeth, Dezso; Rey, Arnaud – Cognitive Science, 2022
Chunking mechanisms are central to several cognitive processes and notably to the acquisition of visuo-motor sequences. Individuals segment sequences into chunks of items to perform visuo-motor tasks more fluidly, rapidly, and accurately. However, the exact dynamics of chunking processes in the case of extended practice remain unclear. Using an…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Schemata (Cognition), Visual Perception, Sequential Learning
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Berent, Iris; Platt, Melanie – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2022
Across languages, certain syllables are systematically preferred to others (e.g., "plaf > ptaf"). Here, we examine whether these preferences arise from motor simulation. In the simulation account, ill-formed syllables (e.g., "ptaf") are disliked because their motor plans are harder to simulate. Four experiments compared…
Descriptors: Phonology, Psycholinguistics, Syllables, Preferences
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